- USS Ommaney Bay (CVE-79)
USS "Ommaney Bay" (CVE–79) was a "Casablanca"-class escort carrier of the
United States Navy , named forOmmaney Bay ,Alaska ."Ommaney Bay", formerly MC hull 1116, was laid down under a
Maritime Commission contract6 October 1943 by Kaiser Company, Inc.,Vancouver, Washington ; launched29 December 1943 , sponsored by Mrs. P. K. Robottom; acquired by the Navy11 February 1944 ; and commissioned the same day, Captain Howard L. Young in command.Service history
After commissioning and fitting out at
Astoria, Oregon , and conducting shakedown inPuget Sound , "Ommaney Bay" sailed19 March from Oakland,California , with passengers and a cargo of supplies and aircraft forBrisbane ,Australia . (While the ship is presumably named for Ommaney Bay in Alaska, note that Brisbane has a landmark and suburb calledMount Ommaney .) By27 April she had completed her mission and was back inSan Diego , where she began a rigorous ten days of carrier qualification landings, drills and tests. Then, after minor alterations and repairs, the ship sailed10 June forPearl Harbor . Until12 August she trained air groups and squadrons there in the art of operating from "baby flattops", then she sailed toTulagi to rehearse for the invasion of thePalau Islands . From11 September until the beginning of October "Ommaney Bay" stood offPeleliu andAnguar Islands and provided air cover for the fleet and close support strikes for the forces ashore."Ommaney Bay" sailed to
Manus Island to renew her depleted stock of fuel and ammunition, then joined Rear AdmiralFelix Stump 's "Taffy 2 " (TU 77.4.2) for the invasion of Leyte. At the beginning of theBattle off Samar on25 October , the escort carriers began launching air strikes in an effort to cripple as many of the approaching enemy force as possible. In the ensuing battle aircraft from "Ommaney Bay" contributed to the sinking of one Japanesecruiser and helped to damage a number of other warships. "Ommaney Bay" launched some six strikes that day, and helped to turn threatened defeat into victory.The carrier spent the month of November at Manus and
Kossol Passage for availability and replenishment, then, from12 December to17 December , operated in the Mindanao andSulu Sea s in support of operations on the Island ofMindoro . On the 15th, a day of heavy enemy air attacks, she splashed an enemy bomber as it dived for the ship from the port bow. On19 December she returned to Kossol Passage to prepare for the landings in Lingayen Gulf.inking
"Ommaney Bay" left on New Year's Day 1945 and transited
Surigao Strait two days later. The next afternoon, while in theSulu Sea , a twin-engine Japanese suicide plane penetrated the screen undetected and made for "Ommaney Bay". The plane nicked her island then crashed her starboard side. Two bombs were released; one of them penetrated the flight deck and detonated below, setting off a series of explosions among the fully-gassed planes on the forward third of the hangar deck. The second bomb passed through the hangar deck, ruptured the fire main on the second deck, and exploded near the starboard side.Water pressure forward was lost immediately, along with power and bridge communications. Men struggling with the terrific blazes on the hangar deck soon had to abandon it because of the heavy black smoke from the burning planes and ricocheting .50 caliber ammunition. Escorts could not lend their power to the fight because of the exploding ammunition and intense heat from the fires. By 17:50 the entire topside area had become untenable, and the stored torpedo warheads threatened to go off at any time. The order to abandon ship was given.
At 19:45 the veteran carrier was sunk by a
torpedo from thedestroyer USS|Burns|DD-588|2. A total of 95 Navy men were lost, including two killed on an assisting destroyer when torpedo warheads on the carrier's hangar deck finally went off.See also
*
List of U.S. Navy losses in World War II References
External links
* [http://history.navy.mil/danfs/o2/ommaney_bay.htm history.navy.mil: USS "Ommaney Bay"]
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/03/079.htm navsource.org: USS "Ommaney Bay"]
* [http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/carriers/cve79.txt hazegray.org: USS "Ommaney Bay"]
* [http://wgordon.web.wesleyan.edu/kamikaze/books/ships/burt/index.htm "Kamikaze Nightmare"] - Review of book by Ron Burt about his brother's experiences of kamikaze attacks on "Ommaney Bay"
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